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    • Started by enceladus47
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    • Registered: 16-Nov-2009
    • Posts: 8

    I started touch typing with qwerty3-4 years ago and reached a speed of about 65 wpm, and i never heard about colemak till about 5-6 weeks ago, so i read about it and checked the forums... and a few days later I switched cold turkey :)

    The program i used was klavaro, i think not seeing the keyboard on the screen was an advantage for me, reached 25 wpm in less than a week. The r/s problem only lasted a couple of days and the t/d a couple more then it was cool, the mistake i still make is the g button, i think using the same finger on another row kinda confused me, also i now sometimes type 3 instead of f :D, don't ask me how that got there, i don't even use 3 as e, but i definitely can't blame that one on colemak :D

    Currently while typing I feel much more comfortable than i did with qwerty, I currently reached about 45 wpm and it increases significantly every few days without much training.

    Due to the cold turkey method I now feel really awkward when I try to type with qwerty, when i get to press j or k I'm like "really?, those are on the home row", but I need to use qwerty a lot on other computers, so did anyone here relearn qwerty as a second language :D

    i know that was long but thanks for reading :)

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    • Registered: 18-Dec-2009
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    I've been reading some advice in other forums. Apparently, don't touch QWERTY until you master Colemak. Then relearn QWERTY. You'll be the able to use both.

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    • Registered: 16-Nov-2009
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    Great, if so then I'm going in the right track :)

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    • Registered: 05-Jan-2010
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    Liquid_Turbo said:

    I've been reading some advice in other forums. Apparently, don't touch QWERTY until you master Colemak. Then relearn QWERTY. You'll be the able to use both.

    When have you *mastered* Colemak?...

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    • From: Houston, Texas
    • Registered: 03-Jan-2007
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    How about, when you are comfortable and fluent in Colemak.

    for most, that's probably 45-60 wpm level

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    • Registered: 05-Jan-2010
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    keyboard samurai said:

    How about, when you are comfortable and fluent in Colemak.

    for most, that's probably 45-60 wpm level

    I was comfortable from 20 WPM on. I'm kind of fluent now, about 35-40 WPM. I won't dare relearn QWERTY in a very, very long time.

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    • Registered: 18-Dec-2009
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    From ryanheise.com:

    "Tips for learning

    After the plateau at 50 WPM, I decided to pay attention to my weaknesses, and I noticed that my most commonly mistyped character was "G". After simply focusing on "G" as I typed, my speed instantly jumped up into the 60s.
    When I got into the 90s, progress was quite slow getting up above 100 WPM. What helped was to practice by typing with a steady rhythm, using the same amount of time to think about each character. This forced me to take the time I needed to catch common mis-presses before they happened, something that I think would have taken much longer to correct otherwise.
    Now that my speed is above 100 WPM, my typing technique works something like this: by default, force myself to type at a steady pace -- but, when I see words or strings of words that I know I can type very quickly (e.g. using known finger rolls) then I remember to speed up on those, -- and, when I see words that I know I have problems with, I remember to slow down and type carefully. This, I have found, is the fastest way for me to type, as it tends to eliminate a lot of wasted time introducing and correcting mistakes. However, it requires being aware of your strong and weak words."

    I found those tips to be of great help to me!

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